Reintegration of Colombia’s former guerrillas threatened: UN

Carlos Ruiz (Image: Twitter)

The reintegration of demobilized FARC guerrillas is being threatened by ongoing violence and the failure of Colombia’s government to provide farmland, the United Nations said Thursday.

Speaking before the UN Security Council, mission chief Carlos Ruiz urged the government of President Ivan Duque to fully implement the 2016 peace deal.

The government’s selective implementation is “insufficient to deactivate the factors that underpinned decades of armed conflict and to achieve the Agreement’s transformative potential,” said Ruiz.

The UN chief stressed that attacks on former FARC fighters and failures to implement the peace deal are threatening the reintegration of the 13,000 former guerrillas who are taking part in the peace process.

While the Security Council met in New York City, Senator Victoria Sandino who demobilized with the FARC in 2017 announced the latest assassination of a former guerrilla.

Senator Victoria Sandino

Demobilized guerrillas under attack

According to Ruiz, “286 men and women who laid down their arms have been killed by the actions of armed actors” over the past five years.

Thirty-eight reintegrating former guerrillas have been assassinated so far this year, according to think tank Indepaz.

Assassinations of former FARC fighters in 2021

In his quarterly report, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres in September warned about “a significant deterioration in security for former combatants in southwest Colombia.”

The UN chief added that community leaders and human rights defenders are being threatened by similar violence.

At least 136 social leaders have been assassinated so far this year, mainly in areas that were effectively controlled by the FARC until the guerrillas’ demobilization.

Government failures

The so-called National Commission on Security Guarantees, which is supposed to improve security of former FARC fighters and vulnerable communities “has not met for the past six months,” according to the UN’s latest report.

The working group on land, which is supposed to provide farmland that would allow rural former FARC members to provide for themselves “did not meet during the reporting period.”

Meanwhile, “there have been persistent delays in the provision of food to all 24 former territorial areas for training and reintegration owing to increased food prices and a change in the service provider,” according to the UN.

The accumulation of failures has forced demobilized guerrillas to leave their reintegration sites, Ruiz told the Security Council.

UN Mission chief Carlos Ruiz

The UN mission chief urged the government to step up the acquisition of land for former FARC guerrillas “so that the endeavors of more former combatants across the country can, literally, take root.”

“Deeper transformations are required to consolidate the reintegration process” and elements of the peace deal that were meant to help communities that have suffered the most from the armed conflict, according to Ruiz.

UN Mission chief Carlos Ruiz

The UN mission chief stressed that “the implementation of the comprehensive rural reform and the solution to the problem of illicit drugs will be instrumental” for the peace process’ success.

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